The Value of Greeting Cards
The Value of Greeting Cards
Don Capps
The Value of Greeting Cards
by Donald C. Capps
From President Maurer: In the Federation we do a
good deal of fund-raising. Part of our purpose is to collect the funds to carry out our
programs. Another part is to inform others about the capacity of the blind. Here is an
article by the senior member of the NFB Board of Directors, Donald Capps. It provides
insight about the life and career of one of our leaders and also illustrates the many
benefits of sending literature and other items to individuals through the mails. This is
what Don says:
I grew up in rural northeastern South Carolina on
a tobacco farm during the Depression. I was the eleventh of eleven children, and our
wonderful Christian mother never passed up an opportunity to tell everyone that I was her
baby. She continued to do so even four decades later. My siblings thought I was spoiled,
and perhaps they were right. I grew up in a large antebellum house which did not have
modern conveniences like indoor plumbing and electricity, but it nevertheless had charm.
Put together with pegs, this old farm house featured high ceilings and both front and back
porches with high back rockers, which we used a great deal during the summer.
Just about every room in the house had a large
fireplace. Before the arrival of cold weather, the wood bin would be filled with cut wood
from the farm. To this day I can still hear the crackling of the burning wood and an aroma
different from any other. In the large dining room there was a homemade table, which was
always covered by an oil cloth that could be easily cleaned. Long, homemade benches
flanked both sides of the table. These accommodated my large family. Unlike today's hectic
pace, with family members eating at different times, we were always together at meal time,
which made it special. My mother, who was an excellent cook, served hot biscuits with each
meal, and they always went fast.
My blindness was due to congenital glaucoma. I
cannot recall ever having any sight in my left eye, and I had seriously impaired vision in
my right eye.
Since my father died when I was six years old, I
don't remember a great deal about him. However, I was extremely fortunate in having a
wonderful mother, who wanted me to have the very best in life. Recognizing my limited
vision, she took me to an optometrist who fitted me with eye glasses. In the mid-1930's,
it was not considered cool for a six-year-old to wear eye glasses. No sooner had I entered
the first grade than I began to be taunted by my classmates. It was necessary for me to
sit close to the blackboard, which set me apart from the rest of the kids, so the taunts
increased. For four-and-a-half years I continued to struggle in the public school system
despite diminishing vision and terrific headaches. This situation forced my mother to
remove me from public school in January, 1939. Traveling thirty miles from my country home
to Florence, then considered a railroad center, I boarded the train for the South Carolina
School for the Blind in Spartanburg, more than 200 miles away. As I boarded the train, my
mother and I both cried. At age ten I had never been more than a few miles from my home.
Although I was treated well at the School for the Blind, the adjustment was difficult, and
I experienced a lot of homesickness. The school served wholesome food, but it was not much
like the home-cooked food I had been accustomed to on the farm. At home we raised most of
our own food, so it wasn't necessary to buy many items from the store. For example, we did
not eat cereal. The school served a lot of cereal. To me the worst of these was All-Bran,
which seemed to be the meal planner's favorite. At times I rebelled, refusing to eat the
All-Bran, but I eventually had to give in since I was not permitted to leave the table
until my bowl was empty. I must confess that, since leaving the school more than fifty
years ago, I've eaten very little cereal and no All-Bran at all.
During the five-and-a-half years I attended the
School for the Blind, I profited immensely from the education, learning all of the basics
including English, algebra, Latin, history, and a little music. Unquestionably, however,
in later life I would come to understand that the Braille instruction I received was
particularly important. In the 1940's blind students had no option but to learn Braille,
even though in my case it was necessary to blindfold me to be sure that I used my fingers
rather than my limited vision.
During my sophomore year I told my classmates and
others that I was not coming back the next year but would enter public school in my
hometown of Mullins for my junior and senior years. No one believed me. During the
five-and-a-half years I attended the School for the Blind, I was always made to feel that
with my bit of sight I was superior to those who were totally blind. Undoubtedly this
false notion affected my thinking and decision to leave the school for my final two years
of high school. Because of the excellent training and education I had received at the
School for the Blind, I did well during my junior and senior years at Mullins High School,
graduating in the top ten percent of the class. I was able to take fewer courses because I
had already had many of them at the School for the Blind.
Meanwhile, my older brothers had left the farm
for greener pastures, making it necessary for my mother to give up farming and move to the
town of Mullins. This occurred in 1940 when I was twelve years of age. I soon learned that
just three houses up the street from my new home lived a beautiful ten-year-old
blond-haired girl, who would eventually become my wife. Her name was Betty Rogers, and we
got along fine. She would even let me ride her bicycle since I never owned one of my own.
In those days homes were not air conditioned.
However, just about every home had a front porch and a swing for summer enjoyment. The
house in which Betty lived was no different. That particular swing stands out in my mind.
When I was fourteen-and-a-half and Betty was twelve, we were swinging together one summer
evening, and I managed to steal a kiss. Was it puppy love?--I think not. Six years later
Betty would become my beautiful eighteen-year-old bride. On June 25, 1999, we will
celebrate our golden wedding anniversary with our two adult children, Craig and Beth, and
three grandchildren.
In 1947 I was fortunate enough to acquire a
junior claim examiner trainee position with Colonial Life and Accident Insurance Company.
From the beginning it was difficult for me to read the material that came across my desk.
With my sight gradually but steadily diminishing, it soon became necessary for me to use
the strongest magnification device available in those days to read claim forms, hospital
records, death certificates, and other items including an occasional lawsuit. In early
1953 my ophthalmologist and I concurred that the time had come when I could no longer see
well enough, even with magnification, to do the necessary reading for my job. I returned
to the office and went straight to the rest room, where I wept.
Unfortunately, in 1953 I did not have knowledge
of or the support of the National Federation of the Blind and its wholesome philosophy
concerning the respectability of blindness and the capability of blind people. My only
course of action seemed to be to go to the president and co-founder of the company, who
had hired me, to explain that I could no longer read and therefore I was submitting my
resignation. I was fortunate in having a boss who had observed my work for a half dozen
years and believed in my overall ability. He quickly responded, "Donald, I have known
for some time that you would not be able to read much longer. I want you to know that
we're not paying you just to read. We are paying you for what you have learned during the
past six years, including your ability to interpret policies, evaluate claims, dictate
letters, and supervise others. We have invested six years in your training, and we do not
want to lose the benefit of your knowledge and expertise. We'll get you a reader, and you
will continue to have a full-time secretary. I see no reason why your blindness should in
any way affect your continuing to do the things for which you have been trained."
In 1953 there was no Americans with Disabilities
Act, but my boss was ahead of the times. Furthermore, my boss's attitude was far superior
to any provision of the Americans with Disabilities Act. As a result of his understanding
and faith in me, for more than thirty years I successfully functioned as a blind person in
claims administration, enjoying a thirty-eight-year career and rising to middle
management.
I joined a local organization of the blind in
August of 1953, but it was another year before I heard about the National Federation of
the Blind. That year my employer received a box of greeting cards and some literature in
the mail from the NFB. I was immediately asked about this organization and given the
information to review. I agreed with every word in the literature and suggested to my
employer that he would do well to contribute to the NFB. Additionally, I promptly wrote to
NFB headquarters and requested more information.
The following year Kenneth Jernigan, then a
member of the NFB Board of Directors, made a trip to upstate South Carolina and met with
Dr. Sam Lawton, founder of the Aurora Club of the Blind. Dr. Jernigan eased some concerns
in the meeting with Dr. Lawton and facilitated the affiliation of the Aurora Club with the
NFB one year later. In 1956 the three chapters of the Aurora Club became a state
organization and subsequently affiliated with the National Federation of the Blind.
I attended my first National Convention in July,
1956, in San Francisco. There I met two giants in the National Federation of the Blind.
They were Dr. Jacobus tenBroek, the distinguished founder of the NFB, and Dr. Kenneth
Jernigan, who would serve the NFB as President from 1968, the year of Dr. tenBroek's
death, until 1986 and as President Emeritus until his death in 1998. Dr. Jernigan had a
profound impact on my life and served as my mentor from the earliest days of our
friendship. The sound philosophy and policies of the National Federation of the Blind have
improved the quality of my life. From the beginning I gave my best efforts to my employer,
attending to my assigned responsibilities and then some. However, the wholesome philosophy
of the NFB taught me to compete successfully with my sighted co-workers for recognition,
promotions, and salary increases.
The Capps' home and family life were typical of
those of any family of four during those years. Our two children recognized that I went to
work each day and was a normal dad despite blindness. In fact my blindness was never an
issue with them. Beth, about five at the time, was playing with a neighborhood friend one
day who remarked, "Beth, your dad is blind."
Beth responded matter-of-factly, "Yes, and
he's smart too."
Like other blind persons I've had a variety of
experiences, some of which were humorous and others not so pleasant. Some years ago, in a
small town about fifty miles south of Columbia, where I now live, an old train depot was
converted into a seafood restaurant. It rapidly gained a reputation from Columbia to
Charleston as the best seafood restaurant in the state. During our first visit the
restaurant cashier observed my white cane and realized that I was blind. She also
recognized that we were from out of town. Upon learning that we were from Columbia, she
commended Betty for being nice enough to drive me there. During our next several visits
the cashier thanked Betty each time for being so nice to me. Finally, one Saturday
afternoon, when my favorite college football team had lost badly and I was therefore not
in a good frame of mind, we decided to visit this seafood restaurant. As though she were
programmed, the cashier once again thanked Betty for driving me down. At this point I lost
my cool. I had had enough; I firmly told the cashier that I agreed with her that it was
nice of my wife to drive me down from Columbia, but it was also nice of me to go to work
everyday and make the payments on the car. From that day on the cashier never thanked
Betty again.
While the cashier had meant well, it was clear
that it had never crossed her mind that blind people could work, maintain a home, raise a
family, or meet normal obligations. What I have learned through my years in the National
Federation of the Blind enables me to deal courteously but firmly with this subtle form of
discrimination. The National Federation of the Blind has also taught me to accept other
responsibilities within both my church and my community. My fellow Rotarians elected me
President of the club in 1974. Other than relying upon a Braille agenda and a Braille
watch, I presided in the same way as any other Rotary president.
Always active in the church, I have served a
number of terms on the Board of Deacons and as Chairman of the important Personnel
Committee. One night after I had efficiently presided at a meeting of the Personnel
Committee, one member—a man with complete confidence in my ability to do the church's
business— said he would be glad to drop me by my house if I could tell him how to get
there. I assured him that I could indeed give him accurate directions to my house, for
otherwise I might wind up in trouble.
What is the value of greeting cards? The National
Federation of the Blind greeting cards certainly changed my life for the better. They
brought me a message of hope, and indirectly they taught me to love my fellow blind. Thus
it is impossible for me to place a true value on the National Federation of the Blind
greeting cards received by my employer some forty-five years ago. The National Federation
of the Blind way of life not only has greatly enriched my life but has enabled me to work
harmoniously with thousands of blind Americans to improve their lives. For this wonderful
opportunity I am deeply grateful.
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